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Found this intresting photo and read.

John Gaunt rat catcher.

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John Wheeldon, better known as John Gaunt. He lived at Sawmills but worked for the Midland Railway Company, travelling the lines as a ratcatcher. He is the only person known to have successfully trained foxes to 'rat' for economic use, and claimed they were better than terriers becaused they could hold five rats in their mouths at once. The ratcatcher had to be quick because, unlike a terrier, foxes did not kill the rats outright. His best two foxes, however, were killed accidentally by gamekeepers. Such was his national fame that he was described in a book as a 'great sportsman great Englishman'. He died , aged seventy three, at the home of a friend in Belper in November 1924, and was buried in Crich churchyard. He was also a prize-winning member of Ambergate Cottage Garden Society.

TC

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Edited by Tiercel
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Found this intresting photo and read.

 

John Gaunt rat catcher.

 

post-20736-0-59016400-1350928684_thumb.jpg

 

 

post-20736-0-70283500-1350928719.jpg

 

John Wheeldon, better known as John Gaunt. He lived at Sawmills but worked for the Midland Railway Company, travelling the lines as a ratcatcher. He is the only person known to have successfully trained foxes to 'rat' for economic use, and claimed they were better than terriers becaused they could hold five rats in their mouths at once. The ratcatcher had to be quick because, unlike a terrier, foxes did not kill the rats outright. His best two foxes, however, were killed accidentally by gamekeepers. Such was his national fame that he was described in a book as a 'great sportsman great Englishman'. He died , aged seventy three, at the home of a friend in Belper in November 1924, and was buried in Crich churchyard. He was also a prize-winning member of Ambergate Cottage Garden Society.

 

TC

 

Any more info??? :thumbs:

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Interesting. :yes: Don't know if its relavant but I read that foxes evolved to be specialist mouse hunters, that's why they are the most cat like canine. Knowing that, its not a stretch to see how they could make good ratters.. :thumbs:

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just goes to show the difference in fox size to whats around now :yes:

 

I saw one yesterday, bolted past me in some thick woodland behind my house. Not joking it was the size of a border collie. I followed up to where it came from and there was an old derelict building, I only stuck around for 10 minutes with the dogs but saw another 2, not as big as the first but a bloody good size none the less.

 

Gaz

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Found this intresting photo and read.

 

John Gaunt rat catcher.

 

jgaunt.jpg

 

 

DCAV001610.jpg

 

John Wheeldon, better known as John Gaunt. He lived at Sawmills but worked for the Midland Railway Company, travelling the lines as a ratcatcher. He is the only person known to have successfully trained foxes to 'rat' for economic use, and claimed they were better than terriers becaused they could hold five rats in their mouths at once. The ratcatcher had to be quick because, unlike a terrier, foxes did not kill the rats outright. His best two foxes, however, were killed accidentally by gamekeepers. Such was his national fame that he was described in a book as a 'great sportsman great Englishman'. He died , aged seventy three, at the home of a friend in Belper in November 1924, and was buried in Crich churchyard. He was also a prize-winning member of Ambergate Cottage Garden Society.

 

TC

Got the bottom photo on my wall, countrymans were knocking them out a few years ago
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